55,995 results on '"Holocène"'
Search Results
2. Rock Glacier Movement and Debris Transport Over Annual to Multi‐Millennial Timescales
- Author
-
Munroe, Jeffrey S, Laabs, Benjamin JC, Corbett, Lee B, Bierman, Paul R, and Handwerger, Alexander L
- Subjects
Earth Sciences ,Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience ,Geology ,Climate Action ,rock glacier ,holocene ,Uinta Mountains ,cosmogenic dating ,periglacial ,InSAR ,Earth sciences ,Environmental sciences - Abstract
Abstract: Rock glaciers are common in alpine landscapes, but their evolution over time and their significance as agents of debris transport are not well‐understood. Here, we assess the movement of an ice‐cemented rock glacier over a range of timescales using GPS surveying, satellite‐based radar, and cosmogenic 10Be surface‐exposure dating. GPS and InSAR measurements indicate that the rock glacier moved at an average rate of ∼10 cm yr−1 in recent years. Sampled boulders on the rock glacier have cosmogenic surface‐exposure ages from 1.2 to 10 ka, indicating that they have been exposed since the beginning of the Holocene. Exposure ages increase linearly with distance downslope, suggesting a slower long‐term mean surface velocity of 3 ± 0.3 cm yr−1. Our findings suggest that the behavior of this rock glacier may be dominated by episodes of dormancy punctuated by intervals of relatively rapid movement over both short and long timescales. Our findings also show that the volume of the rock glacier corresponds to ∼10 m of material stripped from the headwall during the Holocene. These are the first cosmogenic surface‐exposure ages to constrain movement of a North American rock glacier, and together with the GPS and satellite radar measurements, they reveal that rock glaciers are effective geomorphic agents with dynamic multi‐millennial histories.
- Published
- 2024
3. Past fire dynamics in sub-Saharan Africa during the last 25,000 years: Climate change and increasing human impacts.
- Author
-
Bremond, Laurent, Aleman, Julie C., Favier, Charly, Blarquez, Olivier, Colombaroli, Daniele, Connor, Simon E., Cordova, Carlos E., Courtney-Mustaphi, Colin, Dabengwa, Abraham N., Gil-Romera, Graciela, Gosling, William D., Hamilton, Tamryn, Montade, Vincent, Razafimanantsoa, Andriantsilavo H.I., Power, Mitchell J., Razanatsoa, Estelle, Yabi, Ibouraïma, and Vannière, Boris
- Subjects
- *
BIOMASS burning , *CHARCOAL , *DATABASES , *HUMAN growth , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
The aim of this study is to provide the drivers of long-term fire dynamics in various regions of Sub-Saharan Africa using a synthesis of updated sedimentary charcoal records, from 25,000 years ago to the present. We used the charcoal data currently available in the Global Paleofire Database, updated with the most recent published charcoal data, to reconstruct past biomass burning across the continent. We analyzed standardized charcoal data grouped by region (central Africa, eastern Africa, southern Africa, and Indian Ocean) and by vegetation type (forest, savanna, and shrubland). Within this framework, we found that quality data were lacking to reconstruct a robust trend in biomass burning before 5000 years at the continental scale. This large spatial scale was indeed masking regional peculiarities. Our results suggest that past changes in biomass burning were nuanced and cannot be simply attributed to either climate- or humans, and that they varied from each sub-regions and vegetation type history. In central Africa, biomass burning increased after the end of the African Humid Period and the first wave of Bantu-speaking people migration, whereas in East Africa and the Indian Ocean islands, it seems that human population growth was the main driver of fire activity. In South Africa, reduced rainfall seemed to offset fire activity due to population growth by reducing potentially flammable biomass. While the diversity of methodological techniques used to produce charcoal quantification made comparisons difficult, regional patterns still emerged from these data. This synthesis thus highlights the need to increase the number of sites with charcoal data and to harmonize charcoal extraction and quantification methods across Africa to improve regional to continental assessments of fire histories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Tibetan Peat Records Global Major Explosive Volcanic Eruptions in the Holocene.
- Author
-
Peng, Haijun, Enrico, Maxime, Zeng, Mengxiu, Hong, Bing, Wang, Jie, Fan, Baoxiang, Bishop, Kevin, Li, Chuxian, Yin, Runsheng, Bindler, Richard, and Zhu, Wei
- Abstract
Major explosive volcanic eruptions were important triggers of abrupt climate changes during the Holocene and crucial sources of Hg to the atmosphere, yet there remains limited understanding regarding the long‐range transportation of this volcanic Hg and its imprint in natural archives. Here, we present a reconstruction of Holocene global volcanism based on the anomalies in Hg concentrations, accumulation fluxes, and Hg/C ratios in three high‐resolution peat profiles spanning Eurasia. Our reconstruction reveals that the two Tibetan peat profiles recorded 33 major explosive volcanic eruptions (with 11 eruptions being synchronously detected), which correspond with a French Pyrenees peat record and sulfate anomalies in polar ice cores. Additionally, the major explosive volcanic eruptions recorded in the TP peat profiles coincided with abrupt decreases in solar irradiance during the Holocene, suggesting these eruptions might have had a greater global climate impact. Our results suggest the atmospheric transport of volcanic Hg within the Northern Hemisphere and underscore the significant role played by major explosive volcanic eruptions in precipitating abrupt global climate and environmental changes during the Holocene. This study has implications for deciphering the configuration of volcanic eruption seasons, locations, and magnitudes during the Holocene and aligning the chronology of peat deposits with ice cores. Plain Language Summary: Major explosive volcanic eruptions, one of the principal geogenic sources of Hg to the atmosphere, are widely acknowledged as significant drivers of abrupt global environmental and climate changes during the Holocene. While the magnitudes and timing of these eruptions have been well documented in ice core records, the long‐range transportation of the volcanic materials (such as Hg and SO2) and their terrestrial dispersion remain largely unknown. In this study, we present a reconstruction of Holocene global volcanism based on the anomalies in Hg concentrations, accumulation fluxes, and Hg/C ratios in three high‐resolution peat profiles, with two collected from the Tibetan Plateau and one from the French Pyrenees. Our reconstruction reveals that the Tibetan peat profiles recorded 33 major volcanic eruptions, which correspond with a French peat record and the sulfate anomalies in polar ice cores. Additionally, we demonstrate that certain major explosive volcanic eruptions likely triggered several abrupt decreases in solar irradiance during the Holocene. Our findings suggest the convective atmospheric transport of volcanic Hg within the Northern Hemisphere extratropical region and underscore the significant role played by major explosive volcanic eruptions in precipitating abrupt global climate and environmental changes during the Holocene. Key Points: Eleven major explosive volcanic eruptions during the Holocene were synchronously recorded in two peat profiles in the Tibetan PlateauThe recorded major explosive volcanic eruptions coincide with nine abrupt decreases in solar irradiance during the HoloceneThe Hg anomalies in peat profiles have the potential to be chronology markers that were linked with volcanic eruptions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Simulation of the Changing Insolation‐Precipitation Relationship Over East Asia During the Holocene.
- Author
-
Shi, Jian, Zhou, Fang, and Ma, Qiyun
- Abstract
Although summer insolation decreased continuously throughout the Holocene, geological evidence suggests that precipitation over North and South China exhibited out‐of‐phase variations before the middle Holocene, followed by in‐phase variations afterward. This proxy‐based altered relationship between insolation and East Asian precipitation is also obvious in an accelerated transient Holocene experiment. The simulation indicates that the East Asian summer monsoon strength directly responds to the insolation change, failing to explain the varying insolation‐precipitation relationship. However, the western Pacific subtropical high (WPSH) can modulate the moisture transport over East Asia, playing a crucial role in shaping the precipitation response to insolation. During the Holocene, the position and intensity of WPSH are determined not only by changes in insolation but also by changes in its meridional gradient, which could explain the shift in the insolation‐precipitation relationship around the middle Holocene. This conclusion provides a possible mechanism for the asynchronous Holocene optimum of East Asian precipitation. Plain Language Summary: Investigating the climate evolution because of insolation changes helps us understand how the climate responds to natural external forcings. However, despite an increase in summer insolation during both the early Holocene and middle Holocene, proxy records indicate that East Asian precipitation underwent significantly different changes. Whether this changed insolation‐precipitation relationship before and after the middle Holocene is because of internal dynamics processes within the climate system or to external forcings beyond orbital‐induced insolation remains unclear. In this study, we use a transient simulation driven by accelerated orbital parameters to shed light on this question. We reveal that the position and intensity of western Pacific subtropical high (WPSH) are the key to understanding the altered insolation‐precipitation relationship. Furthermore, the shift in the WPSH is not only influenced by the changes in insolation itself but also by the changes in its meridional gradient. The different latitude‐dependence of insolation changes in the early and middle Holocene consequently lead to varying WPSH responses and distinct East Asian precipitation changes. Our simulation suggests that the asynchronous Holocene optimum of East Asian precipitation may have been triggered by insolation variations. However, the discrepancy between reconstruction and simulation implies that other external forcings may also contribute, and further research is necessary. Key Points: The East Asian summer precipitation responses to increased insolation are revealed to be changed before and after the middle HoloceneThe meridional position of the western Pacific subtropical high is the key to the altered insolation‐precipitation relationshipThe meridional position of the western Pacific subtropical high is determined by the meridional gradient of insolation change [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Morphogenetic and palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Lagoon of Kotychi in western Peloponnese, Greece, during the Holocene.
- Author
-
Barra, Diana, Donadio, Carlo, Lämmle, Luca, Perez Filho, Archimedes, Stamatopoulos, Leonidas, Valente, Alessio, Kontopoulos, Nikolaos, Parisi, Roberta, Stanislao, Corrado, and Aiello, Giuseppe
- Subjects
- *
ALLUVIAL plains , *FRACTAL analysis , *PALEOECOLOGY , *LAGOONS , *SHORELINES - Abstract
Multidisciplinary researches allowed us to describe the morphological and palaeoenvironmental dynamics of the Kotychi Lagoon in the Holocene. This transition environment is separated from the open sea by a low barrier and has limited communication with it through a stable, short, and narrow inlet. The lagoon is limited by a modern alluvial plain made by several streams. Along the landward lagoon margins, small-scale deltas of these streams prograded into the lagoon. Intertidal and supratidal mud flats developed among the deltas, covered with vegetation (e.g., Salicornia sp.). Northwards, the lagoon is limited by a large marshy area. To the North of this area, a group of well-developed beach ridges parallel to the current shoreline is present. These are affected by erosion, and migrating sandy dunes have buried some of the beach ridges. South of the lagoon, the ancient Peneus River delta is located. The bottom depth in the Kotychi Lagoon decreases gradually from the landward of the barrier to the inner lagoon margins. Although the maximum depth is about 2.5 m in front of the inlet, the average depth is only 0.5 m. The main lithological type of the lagoon sediments is sandy mud, with some exceptions in the eastern edge of the lagoon and some locations around it where silty-clayey sediment was deposited. According to geomorphological surveys and palaeoecological interpretation of two cores analysis as well as with previous researches and datings, the recent morphogenetic evolution of this lagoon is mainly due to three Holocene phases: 1) 7-4 ka BP: sediment filling, development of a primitive open lagoon; 2) 4–1.5 ka BP: development of sandy ridges, partially closed lagoon; 3) 1.5 ka BP - present-day: closed lagoon, with one mouth. Fractal analysis confirms that currently the basin shape is evolving from a lagoon towards a coastal pond, due to contraction and filling up by sediments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Reconstructing Holocene centennial cooling events: synthesized temperature changes, chronology, and forcing in the Northern Hemisphere.
- Author
-
Gorbarenko, Sergey A., Shi, Xuefa, Liu, Yanguang, Bosin, Aleksandr A., Vasilenko, Yuriy P., Artemova, Antonina V., Yanchenko, Elena A., Zou, Jianjun, Yao, Zhengquan, and Kirichenko, Ivan S.
- Subjects
ATLANTIC meridional overturning circulation ,INTERTROPICAL convergence zone ,EL Nino ,SOUTHERN oscillation ,HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Numerous studies, spanning experimental, instrumental, historical, and modeled approaches, have delved into understanding climate change across the Holocene era and millennial-scale occurrences. However, the chronology and causes of centennial-scale climate events during the Holocene remain controversial. In this study, we overviewed 10 of the best-resolved and most accurately dated records detailing climate change in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) over the Holocene, obtained from different proxies across different climatic zones, and constructed a stack of temperature changes in the NH. Based on the constructed stack, we identified and categorized 15 notable Holocene centennial cooling events (HCCEs) in the NH (period with temperature decreases). To test the chronological validity of the constructed HCCEs, we compared them with the most accurately dated and highly resolved climate records during the last 3 kyr, which have been extensively investigated by the scientific community. Based on the close alignment of the outlined HCCEs with temperature records, we suggest that other HCCEs also match centennial climate cooling events over the last 10 kyr. To understand the origins of the established HCCEs, we compared them with potential climate influencing factors: total solar irradiance (TSI), explosive volcanic activity, Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC)-limited slowdowns, Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) fluctuations, and El Niño/Southern Oscillation (ENSO variability. Early Holocene HCCE 5, terminated by a prominent 8.2-ka cold event, was likely driven by the superposition of the AMOC limited slowdown, TSI minimum, and volcanic activity. The Holocene Thermal Maximum (HTM) happened between HCCEs 5 and 4a and was interrupted by HCCE 4c and 4b, coeval, with a significant southward shift of the ITCZ, likely related to cooling in the tropical zone. However, the sequence of HCCEs 3b, 3a, and 2b (over 4.53–3.42 BP), accompanied by small changes in the TSI, was likely forced by an increase in ENSO variability, leading to remarkable changes in the tropical processes and a southward shift of the ITCZ, coeval with the collapse of the Chinese Neolithic cultures and onset of the Holocene Neoglacial. Subsequent HCCEs 2a–0a were likely forced by the TSI minimum combined with the influence of ENSO and volcanism over the last 2 ka. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Coastal flooding in Kołobrzeg (Kolberg) area, southern Baltic Sea, in the light of historical and geological data.
- Author
-
Piotrowski, Andrzej, Brose, Fritz, and Sydor, Paweł
- Subjects
- *
WEATHER , *RADIOCARBON dating , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *SEASHORE , *FLOODS - Abstract
The Baltic Sea is not a typical tsunami area, but there are reports of coastal flooding, with its traces preserved in deposits from Germany, Finland and Sweden, and more recently from Poland. In this study an attempt was made to verify historical and legendary accounts of the 'Sea Bear' ('der Seebär') phenomenon. In the descriptions of folk accounts, the phenomenon has the features such as suddenness, speed, short duration, independence from the atmospheric conditions on land and sea. The search for coastal flooding deposits was conducted around the town of Kołobrzeg (Kolberg), located on the southern coast of the Baltic Sea. For the study area in chronicle record exist information about two events (17 September 1497 and 1 March 1779). For both events no record has been found in geological profiles, probably due to strong anthropogenic transformation of the subsurface layers. However there is quite precise information from chronicle records on the extent of the event from 17 September 1497 and on the thickness of the sandy layer left by the flooding. Based on this information in the Kołobrzeg area the range of the sand layer was 1400 m from the seashore, and its thickness locally reached approximately 10 cm. The flood height estimated according to the above-presented assumptions was 4.9 m a.s.l. In the Baltic Sea area, coastal flooding is possibly due to atmospheric forcing which can be responsible for an external waves event and devastating long waves, which have the same spatial and temporal scale as typical tsunami waves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Role of aggregates in the forming process of tephric loess dunes distributed along the Pacific coast of eastern Japan.
- Author
-
Tanino, Kikuko, Hosono, Mamoru, and Watanabe, Makiko
- Subjects
- *
WIND erosion , *MARINE sediments , *LANDFORMS , *BLACK cotton soil , *VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. , *SAND dunes - Abstract
The Pacific coast of eastern Japan contains specific aeolian landforms of geomorphological interest in terms of their formation processes in humid climates and Holocene paleoenvironments. Wind erosion landforms, characterised by blowouts, were observed at the heads of coastal cliffs which consisted of marine gravel sediments, weathered volcanic ash layers (WVALs) and black soil layers (BSLs). The blowouts were accompanied by downwind tephric loess dunes. We analysed the physicochemical properties of the WVAL, BSL and dune sediment samples. The results revealed that clay and silt contents in dune sediments were 5–48% and 20–35%, respectively. The fine particles were in the form of aggregates in the WVALs, BSLs and dune sediments, with contributions from andic properties. WVAL and BSL aggregates were prone to movement in saltation, depositing into the dunes in a formation process similar to that of clay dunes in semiarid zones. The tephric loess dunes were characterised as clay dunes based on their high clay and silt contents. In addition, the dunes were characterised by durable aggregates derived from short-range-order minerals, such as allophane. The prevailing northeasterly winds caused by intense low pressures were responsible for dune formation in the study areas. Radiocarbon dating revealed two active wind periods. The first was approximately 1005–895 cal. BC to 358–281 cal. BC, and the second was 771–886 cal. AD to 1021–1155 cal. AD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Relationship between extreme species richness and Holocene persistence of forest-steppe grasslands in Transylvania, Romania.
- Author
-
Novák, Jan, Šamonil, Pavel, and Roleček, Jan
- Subjects
- *
SOIL structure , *SOIL horizons , *TEMPERATE forests , *SOIL profiles , *SOIL testing , *GRASSLANDS - Abstract
The most species-rich grasslands worldwide are known from the Carpathian Mts and their periphery in East-Central Europe. They occur in forest-steppe regions, transitional between temperate forest and arid steppe biomes. Their climate, largely suitable for forests, raises questions about the origin of these grasslands. Have they been forested in the past, or locally maintained through a disturbance regime? We addressed these questions to contribute to the broader understanding of Holocene dynamics of open habitats in temperate Europe. We employed soil charcoal analysis and soil morphology to reconstruct past representation of woody species with fine spatial resolution. Our study area was Romanian Transylvania, a region renowned for a well-developed forest-steppe. Six soil profiles along a climatic gradient were assessed: four in forest-steppe grasslands, two in grasslands in adjacent forest region (forest grasslands). The results revealed profound differences between forest-steppe and forest grasslands. Forest-steppe profiles showed Phaeozems with low specific anthracomass of woody species and continuous dominance by Juniperus, suggesting a long-term presence of grasslands. Forest grasslands showed Luvisols with higher anthracomass and abundant charcoal of broad-leaved trees, indicating establishment after deforestation. The high radiocarbon ages of charcoals in basal soil horizons point to a glacial origin of soils and the link of forest-steppe grasslands to glacial forests. Siberian hemiboreal forests and related grasslands may be modern analogues of the reconstructed ecosystems, sharing many species with present day forest-steppe. We suggest that disturbances such as fire, herbivore grazing, and human activities have played an important role in shaping the forest-steppe over time, contributing to the formation of today's richest grasslands. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Shallow lake response to Holocene climate variation in south-central Minnesota, USA.
- Author
-
Tennent, E Rae, Maxbauer, Daniel P, and Umbanhowar, Charles E
- Subjects
- *
GLACIATION , *CARBONATE minerals , *CLIMATE change , *CARBON isotopes , *ICE sheets - Abstract
Sedimentary deposits in lakes across the upper Midwest record the co-evolution of climate and biogeochemistry since the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet at the end of the last glacial period. Here, we report on a Holocene lake sediment record from Chub Lake, a shallow (3 m depth) eutrophic lake system in south-central Minnesota. High-resolution elemental data from scanning XRF along with variations in organic matter, carbonate minerals, clastic material, biogenic silica, charcoal, and carbon isotopes reveal internally consistent patterns of hydroclimatic influence on this shallow lake system from 11,300 years BP to present. In particular, authigenic carbonate mineral formation and preservation in Chub Lake appears to be well suited as a moisture proxy beginning around 9700 BP up until ∼2300 BP, when a combination of more humid climates and basin-infilling change the hydrology of Chub Lake. This work emphasizes the importance of evaluating shallow lake sediment records both as important archives of climate proxies and case studies on how changing climates impact aquatic systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Mid to Late-Holocene environmental dynamics recorded in Lake Pup Lagoon, East Antarctica: Insights from environmental magnetism and biogeochemical proxies.
- Author
-
Noronha-D'Mello, Cheryl A., Nair, Abhilash, B.S., Mahesh, Warrier, Anish K., and Mohan, Rahul
- Subjects
- *
SEA ice , *DIAGENESIS , *WEATHERING , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *LAKE sediments - Abstract
Paleoenvironmental archives in East Antarctica have revealed significant changes during the Holocene, marked by ice sheet retreat leading to the isolation of submarine basins. These basins offer valuable insights into past climate, glaciology, and oceanography shifts that impact sedimentary processes. In this study, environmental magnetism and biogeochemical proxies to investigate the Mid-to-Late-Holocene transitions in Pup Lagoon, a coastal isolation basin is presented. Our findings reveal distinct stratigraphic zones reflecting shifts from marine to lacustrine environments. The results reveal predominant mechanical weathering in the Stornes region, producing coarse-grained "soft" ferrimagnetic minerals. Notably, a period of warm oceanographic conditions between 6000 and 4722 cal. yr BP was characterized by mixed magnetic grain sizes and ultrafine superparamagnetic grains, indicating relatively oxic open waters in the basin. Subsequent shifts to reducing conditions coincide with persistent marine sea ice cover from 4722 to 2634 cal. yr BP, favoring the retention of coarse-grained ferrimagnets. Finer magnetic grain sizes between 2634 and 2185 cal. yr BP was attributed to the increased freshwater inputs associated with the Mid-Holocene Hypsithermal. Further, diagenetic changes under persistent sea ice cover between 2185 and 1970 cal. yr BP led to the selective dissolution of fine-grained ferrimagnets. Transitioning to freshwater isolated basin conditions between 1970 and 588 cal. yr BP, fine ferrimagnet precipitation indicate oxic to suboxic conditions alongside drier conditions. Biogenic productivity increased post-isolation, which was reflected in increased (Total Organic Carbon) TOC and (Total Nitrogen) TN percentages. Additionally, the presence of greigite in the isolated phase sediment indicates reducing conditions owing to organic matter decomposition. Notably, χfd% exhibits an inverse trend to sea ice concentration, potentially indicating anoxic-dysoxic conditions due to the presence of sea ice. These observations align with broader regional sea ice concentration changes, emphasizing the interconnected behavior of local and regional factors shaping Antarctic coastal environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Humans and climate in ritualized landscapes, the case of Lake Tota in the eastern highlands of Colombia.
- Author
-
Vélez, Maria I, Salgado, Jorge, Delgado, Miguel, Patiño, Luisa F, Bird, Broxton, Escobar, Jaime H, and Fajardo, Sebastian
- Subjects
- *
LITTLE Ice Age , *INDIGENOUS peoples of South America , *CLIMATE change , *FUNCTIONAL groups , *GEOCHEMISTRY , *FOSSIL diatoms - Abstract
Tota is an Andean lake located in the Altiplano of the Eastern Andes of Colombia where socio-politically hierarchical societies of the Herrera and Muisca, flourished for millennia. To them, the lake and surrounding forest were places used for diverse of activities including religious rituals. In this study we produced a multi-proxy paleolimnological reconstruction using diatoms, isotopes, and geochemistry, to try to understand the lake's pathways of change in response to natural climatic variations and anthropogenic activities. The diatom record is dominated by tychoplanktonic Staurosirella dubia and planktonic Aulacoseira species including species A. cf lirata, A. granulata, A. distans, and A. ambigua. Diatoms were grouped into functional groups and used to infer limnological changes that were further complemented with the geochemistry of the sediments to reconstruct the past environment. Results show three main periods in which the lake changed significantly, these are dated from ~800 to 1200, 1200 to 1500, and 1500 to 1900 CE. A correlation with the archeological record of the region, ethnohistoric accounts and climate suggests that these changes occurred simultaneously with changes in archeological stages, the Spanish arrival, and more recently by the industrial revolution, and the Little Ice Age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Geochemical records of mudflat sediments from southern Saurashtra, Western India: Implications for Holocene climate and global teleconnection.
- Author
-
Banerji, Upasana S, Bhushan, Ravi, Joshi, Kumar Batuk, Dabhi, Ankur, Sudheer, AK, Dubey, Chandra Prakash, Panda, Rakesh Kumar, Haridas, Nayana V, and Gaddam, Mahesh
- Subjects
- *
INTERTROPICAL convergence zone , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *DECCAN traps , *WAVELETS (Mathematics) , *GLOBAL warming - Abstract
The heat transfer from the low latitudes to high latitudes is responsible for maintaining the earth's climate dynamics. Thus, deciphering the possible mechanism driving the variability of the Indian summer monsoon (ISM) during the Holocene Epoch has been critical to understand the hydroclimatic changes of the low latitudes. Despite several efforts, the teleconnection of ISM with the global climate dynamics remains under-represented and poorly understood. The present study aims to delineate the ISM variability and its possible forcing mechanism from western India (Gujarat). In this study, a sediment core (~65 cm long) was raised from the Jaffrabad mudflat (MIT) in western Gujarat. The sediment samples were subjected to geochemical analysis to investigate paleomonsoon, paleo-sediment source and paleoweathering changes. The results show that, with the addition of intermediate sources, the sediments were principally derived from the hinterland's Deccan basalts. Further, the study suggested a warm and wet climate due to strong ISM during 10,650−5500 cal yr BP associated with the solar as well as orbital forcings. The weak monsoon during 5500−2700 cal yr BP has been linked with southward migration of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) along with the increased El Niño-like conditions. Further, the wavelet analysis revealed that a combined influence of solar, orbital and North Atlantic forcings led to monsoon variability along western India, during the Holocene Epoch. By reconciling the geochemical proxies, the present study has implications in the reconstruction of paleomonsoon and establishing the possible teleconnection with the global climate system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Aboriginal earth mounds and ENSO on the Calperum floodplain, Murray-Darling Basin, South Australia.
- Author
-
Jones, Robert, Roberts, Amy, Westell, Craig, Moffat, Ian, Jacobsen, Geraldine, and Scott Cummings, Linda
- Subjects
- *
SOUTHERN oscillation , *AQUATIC resources , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *RADIOCARBON dating ,EL Nino - Abstract
This paper presents new data derived from pollen, starch and radiocarbon samples that were collected from six Aboriginal earth (oven) mounds and middens on the Calperum and Pike floodplains, Murray-Darling Basin (MDB), South Australia (SA). Analyses of these samples were undertaken in order to enhance our understanding about the Holocene lifeways of Aboriginal people living in this region. The results from these analyses, combined with published data about the mounds' contents, relevant ethno-historical information and climate data, allow us to infer that Aboriginal people adopted, in this region, an innovative food production system about 3800 years ago. Further, we argue that the timing of the change suggests this was in response to adverse El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) related weather patterns and consequently fluctuations in both terrestrial and aquatic food resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A record of late Holocene sea level and human impacts from the southeastern Coast of Sri Lanka.
- Author
-
Premathilake, Rathnasiri and Herath, Jayani
- Subjects
- *
SEA level , *DINOFLAGELLATE cysts , *TROPICAL dry forests , *VEGETATION dynamics , *MANGROVE ecology , *MANGROVE plants - Abstract
AMS radiocarbon-dated palynological evidence from Embilikala Lagoon in Bundala National Park (one of the Ramsar wetland sites) on the southeast coast of Sri Lanka indicates palaeoenvironmental changes during the last 2,700 years. The persistence of fewer mangroves (eg Rhizophoraceae taxa) suggests that sea level low stands occurred between 2,700 and 1750 cal yr BP. From the later age, the relative sea level rose, and reached the present sea level at 950 cal yr BP as indicated by the mangrove maximum. At 2,250, 700–400 and 200–150 cal yr BP, the sudden increase in marine dinoflagellate cysts (eg Spiniferites mirabilis) and foraminifera (Globigerinoides ruber) suggests increased marine influence. This is consistent with a decrease in mangrove habitats. Between 2,700 and 950 cal yr BP, severely degraded dry monsoon forests and minimal levels mangrove suggest human and marine influences were the critical drivers for changing the major vegetation types along the southeastern coast. Vegetation changes have been drastic over the last millennia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The depositional record of the French Flemish Coastal plain since antiquity: Impacts of land reclamation in a tide‐dominated estuary.
- Author
-
Ouchaou, Rachid, Reynaud, Jean‐Yves, Besse, Youn, Tilehghouatine, Anissa, Armynot du Châtelet, Eric, Trentesaux, Alain, Abraham, Romain, Deschodt, Laurent, Hulin, Guillaume, Desoutter, Samuel, Fores, Benjamin, Simon, François‐Xavier, and Lançon, Mathieu
- Abstract
The French Flemish Coastal Plain, which extends from Denmark to France, is characterised by a topography close to sea level and protected by a system of coastal dunes. Quaternary sediments, comprised of marine, estuarine and continental deposits, accumulated by infilling and then prograding above a network of incised valleys. This study focusses on the Holocene infill of the Denna palaeoestuary, south‐west to Dunkerque. Surface geophysics (electrical conductivity and ground‐penetrating radar) and vibrocore data are used to reconstruct the landscape evolution during the last stages of sedimentation. The conductivity map highlights the last network of tidal channels, ditches and dikes of the eastern side of the palaeoestuary. Over the upper 4 m of the infill, the ground‐penetrating radar profiles show two superimposed units. The bottom unit is composed of meandering channel bars and the top unit of flat strata intersected by sparse channels, mostly infilled in place. The sediment analysis of the vibrocores shows a predominantly sandy filling of marine to estuarine origin, evidenced by sponge spicules and a fauna of bivalves and foraminifera adapted to brackish settings. The uppermost deposit exhibits an oxidation profile which marks the groundwater zone transition. Clayey sediments are also present, infilling the uppermost channels and ditches dug during reclamation, in increasing proportions towards the axis of the estuarine palaeovalley. The tidal signature of sedimentary dynamics is evidenced by heterolithic facies in some channel fills and tidal rhythmites infilling scour depressions linked to dike breaching. The abrupt decrease in channel dynamics across the unit boundary, although sedimentation remained sandy in the upper unit, coincides with the development of embankment of the estuarine border and is tentatively interpreted as a result of reclamation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Fluvial responses to Holocene climatically induced coastline migration in the Iguape River estuary (Southeast Brazil).
- Author
-
Souza, André de Oliveira, Filho, Archimedes Perez, Arruda, Emerson Martins, Cerrone, Ciro, and Lämmle, Luca
- Abstract
Rivers represent intricate geomorphological systems that exhibit sensitivity to even subtle base‐level changes. This study examines the geomorphological response of Ribeira de Iguape River, located along the southern coast of São Paulo state, Brazil, to hydrological changes and coastline migration resulting from Holocene climate pulses. Using a multidisciplinary approach, including geomorphological and stratigraphical analyses, optically stimulated luminescence dating, grain‐size analyses, interpretation of satellite images, mapping and reassessment of previous studies, we investigated the potential impacts of these geomorphological dynamics on the river system. Our study reveals two distinct orders of low fluvial terraces, typically inserted no more than 10 m above the average channel discharge, which are geochronologically correlated with the low marine terraces that document the former coastline position at the river mouth, as previously identified in other studies. Such findings indicate a deposition phase when the coastline was stabilised on the inner continent in the Medieval Warm Period, as well as an erosion phase when the coastline migrated seaward during the Little Ice Age. This research contributes to improving our understanding of how rivers can respond to base‐level changes and provides valuable insights into the dynamic interactions between river systems and coastal environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Latitudinal patterns of shifts in cladoceran communities throughout the Holocene: A paleoecological case study of northwestern Russia.
- Author
-
Ibragimova, Aisylu G., Krolenko, Ivan I., Frolova, Larisa A., Subetto, Dmitry A., Potakhin, Maksim S., Belkina, Natalya A., Grekov, Ivan M., and Kotov, Alexey A.
- Subjects
- *
BODIES of water , *SEDIMENT analysis , *PALEOECOLOGY , *SEDIMENT sampling , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Paleolimnology is a rapidly expanding field within the natural sciences. To date, many scientific papers have been published focusing on studies of remains from single sediment cores in specific lakes, or a few cores from the same water body. However, few previous publications have provided a comprehensive comparative analysis of taphocenosis (and maternal community) changes in different water bodies from a large geographical region during whole Holocene using multivariate statistical methods. We conducted a joined statistical analysis of data obtained as a result of the cladoceran analysis of the sediment samples from six cores taken along the North-South transect from the Kola Peninsula to the Karelian Region (North-West Russia). Our aim was to identify, based on quantitative statistical methods, general whole-Holocene patterns in cladoceran taphocenosis changes. All taphocenoses in all cores from six lakes can be classified into six clusters based on their species composition. Our unexpected conclusion is that different taphocoenoses are formed by the same set of species, but their proportions vary significantly. This suggests that the same species may play different functional roles in different maternal communities. During whole Holocene, we observed a single taphocenosis cluster in the Holocene core from Lake Antyukh-Lambina, and four taphocenosis clusters in the Lake Medvedevskoe, with an intermediate number of clusters in the lakes between them. Furthermore, it can be asserted that the potential for cluster changes in the core is greater for the more southern studied water bodies (0–3 clusters for northern lakes vs. 4 clusters for southern lakes). Based on our data, we hypothesize that the diversity of cladoceran associations during the Holocene was lower in Arctic/Subarctic lakes, possibly due to their formation by ubiquitous species. Our study suggests that at least some Arctic lake ecosystems have remained unchanged since deglaciation times. Further studies are necessary to determine if this is a general rule. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Recent Sociocultural Changes Reverse the Long‐Term Trend of Declining Habitat Availability for Large Wild Mammals in Europe.
- Author
-
Davoli, Marco, Kuemmerle, Tobias, Monsarrat, Sophie, Crees, Jennifer, Cristiano, Andrea, Pacifici, Michela, and Svenning, Jens‐Christian
- Subjects
- *
POPULATION density , *EFFECT of human beings on climate change , *MAMMAL communities , *SPECIES diversity , *SPECIES distribution - Abstract
ABSTRACT Aim Location Methods Results Main Conclusions People have strongly influenced the biosphere for millennia, but how their increasing activities have shaped wildlife distribution is incompletely understood. We examined how the distribution of European large (>8 kg), wild mammals has changed in association with changing anthropogenic pressures and climate change through the Holocene.Europe.We used over 17,000 zooarchaeological records of 20 species spanning 12,000 years to develop time‐calibrated species distribution models, incorporating dynamic data on cropland extent, natural vegetation fragmentation, human population density and climate. We assessed habitat availability and potential species richness across time and within seven biogeographical regions. We also compared anthropogenic pressures at zooarchaeological record sites with present‐day habitats of remaining large mammals to evaluate recent increases in their potential for coexistence with human activities.We found a continuous decline in potential large mammal species richness, particularly linked to changes in human population density. Most habitat loss became evident continentally after 1500 AD, but in the Atlantic and Mediterranean bioregions, habitat loss reached 20% during the Iron/Roman Ages (1000 BC–500 AD) due to increasing human population density. Climate change initially boosted species richness (+0.67 species/km2 on average) until the end of the Mesolithic but had negligible effects afterward. Today, large mammals appear to have a higher potential for coexisting with people compared to the past (e.g., herbivores today inhabit areas with a mean human population density of 95 people/km2, compared to an average of 17 people/km2 in the period 1500–2000 AD).Our study emphasizes the crucial role of anthropogenic pressures over natural climate change in determining the distribution and diversity of large mammal communities throughout history. Additionally, our results indicate that contemporary anthropogenic trends like land‐use de‐intensification and stronger conservation policies can counteract the impact of past, higher anthropogenic pressures and reverse defaunation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Bayhead delta succession as a stratigraphic marker of sea‐level changes during the early to late Holocene – the Nakdong valley of south‐eastern Korea.
- Author
-
Hong, Seok‐Hwi, Ryang, Woo Hun, Yoo, Dong‐Geun, Simms, Alexander R., Kim, Jin Cheul, and Lee, Gwang‐Soo
- Abstract
Bayhead deltas form at the interface between fluvial and estuarine systems. As such, they are sensitive to processes operating in both the fluvial catchment and the marine realm, including past relative sea‐level changes. The Nakdong valley is a small and confined incised valley containing a bayhead delta that provides a record of fluvial sediment input and accommodation changes. Based on a facies analysis that included 833 sediment textures and 118 optically stimulated luminescence and radiocarbon ages within five cores up to 70 m long, this study reconstructed the development of a fully filled bayhead delta in response to relative sea‐level changes through the early to late Holocene. Sixteen facies are defined and grouped into eight facies associations: alluvial plain; fluvial channel and floodplain; oxidized fluvial channel; tidal flat; tidal bar; central basin and bayhead prodelta; bayhead delta front; and bayhead delta plain. The sequence stratigraphy of the Nakdong valley fill can be divided into three systems tracts: a lowstand systems tract, a transgressive systems tract and a highstand systems tract. Overall sedimentary analyses suggest six depositional stages corresponding to variations between sediment inputs and sea‐level rise of the developing bayhead delta in the Nakdong valley. The depositional model tracks relative sea‐level rise in the Nakdong valley after 12 ka during the early to late Holocene. These analyses on the Nakdong bayhead delta succession illustrate the balance between sediment inputs and periods of accelerating and decelerating relative sea‐level rise during the Holocene. The architecture of the valley fill also records two abrupt disequilibrium events from 9 to 8 ka and 5 to 3 ka, likely resulting from rapid sea‐level rise during the deglacial outburst flooding of the early Holocene and decreased sediment inputs during regional climatic changes associated with the middle Holocene, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Inferring past demographic changes at different spatial scales in Northwest Patagonia and central‐south Chile: Comparing absolute dates with molecular data.
- Author
-
Cobos, Virginia A., Postillone, María Bárbara, Bernal, Valeria, and Perez, S. Ivan
- Subjects
- *
DEMOGRAPHIC change , *MITOCHONDRIAL DNA , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *INFORMATION resources , *GENEALOGY - Abstract
In this study, we compare the patterns of demographic changes in populations from Northwest Patagonia and central‐south Chile throughout the Late Pleistocene–Holocene obtained from absolute dates with those resulting from molecular genealogies. We have found that temporal distributions of frequencies of absolute dates constitute a more sensitive demographic indicator than molecular data to make inferences at small spatial scales in the region. Moreover, even though the latter has proven to be very informative about old demographic processes, it represents a less reliable source of information for more recent ones. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Coastal Dunes of the Maida River Estuary Area (Zimniy Coast of the White Sea): Spatial Distribution and Evolution Patterns.
- Author
-
Repkina, T. Yu., Leontiev, P. A., Krekhov, A. K., Vyatkin, E. D., Orlov, A. V., Lugovoy, N. N., and Shilova, O. S.
- Subjects
- *
COASTS , *COASTAL changes , *GROUND penetrating radar , *LITTORAL drift , *AERIAL photography , *SAND dunes - Abstract
We present new data of White Sea Coast dynamics within NE of the Gorlo Strait that were generated by satellite images, geomorphological and ground penetrating radar (GPR) profiling, aerial photography, and topographic surveys of coastal terraces and dunes. Our paleogeomorphological studies, supported by laboratory findings (diatom analysis and 14C dating), allowed us to reconstruct the morphodynamics of coastal and aeolian landforms. The obtained reconstruction enabled the evaluation of relative sea level (RSL) changes and the evolution of coastal landforms over the past ~ 3.7 cal ka BP. According to our research, sand was supplied to coastal zone and coastal dunes through scarp erosion (0.5–3.7 m/year) as well as from the shoreface, while the role of alluvial runoff is insignificant. The largest dune massifs were formed in the areas of longshore drift (from NE to SW) discharge. At the mouth of the Maida River, the barrier spit and foredune plain have been evolving from the end of the Holocene transgression (∼3.7–2.3 cal ka BP). The mean high water at this time was slightly higher (up to ∼2.5 m a.s.l.), and coastal processes were significantly more intense than current ones. Then, against a decrease in sea level and weakening sediment flows, the growth of the spit slowed. The ancient foredunes were stabilized by vegetation. Aeolian processes were activated ∼2.1 and after ∼0.8–0.7 cal ka BP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Evaluating species distribution model predictions through time against paleozoological records.
- Author
-
Lazagabaster, Ignacio A., Thomas, Chris D., Spedding, Juliet V., Ikram, Salima, Solano‐Regadera, Irene, Snape, Steven, and Bro‐Jørgensen, Jakob
- Subjects
- *
SPECIES distribution , *CURRENT distribution , *DATA recorders & recording , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Species distribution models (SDMs) are widely used to project how species distributions may vary over time, particularly in response climate change. Although the fit of such models to current distributions is regularly enumerated, SDMs are rarely tested across longer time spans to gauge their actual performance under environmental change. Here, we utilise paleozoological presence/absence records to independently assess the predictive accuracy of SDMs through time. To illustrate the approach, we focused on modelling the Holocene distribution of the hartebeest, Alcelaphus buselaphus, a widespread savannah‐adapted African antelope. We applied various modelling algorithms to three occurrence datasets, including a point dataset from online repositories and two range maps representing current and 'natural' (i.e. hypothetical assuming no human impact) distributions. We compared conventional model evaluation metrics which assess fit to current distributions (i.e. True Skill Statistic, TSSc, and Area Under the Curve, AUCc) to analogous 'paleometrics' for past distributions (i.e. TSSp, AUCp, and in addition Boycep, F2‐scorep and Sorensenp). Our findings reveal only a weak correlation between the ranking of conventional metrics and paleometrics, suggesting that the models most effectively capturing present‐day distributions may not be the most reliable to hindcast historical distributions, and that the choice of input data and modelling algorithm both significantly influences environmental suitability predictions and SDM performance. We thus advocate assessment of model performance using paleometrics, particularly those capturing the correct prediction of presences, such as F2‐scorep or Sorensenp, due to the potential unreliability of absence data in paleozoological records. By integrating archaeological and paleontological records into the assessment of alternative models' ability to project shifts in species distributions over time, we are likely to enhance our understanding of environmental constraints on species distributions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Characterization of the Major Elements and Paleoenvironmental Significance of the Shiyang Profile in the Weinan Basin, China.
- Author
-
Cao, Jing, Dong, Qiuyao, Li, Chengxiang, Wang, Pan, Yang, Zhenjing, and Chen, Hongyun
- Subjects
- *
CHEMICAL weathering , *CONTINENTAL crust , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *CHEMICAL elements , *LOESS - Abstract
The enrichment and migration patterns of different chemical elements record paleoclimatic information in loess formations. The chemical elemental measurements of 245 samples from the Shiyang profile in the Weinan Region were compared with the geochemical characteristics of typical wind-formed profiles, and the paleoclimatic evolution was discussed. The results showed the following: (1) the standardized curves of the cumulative concentrations of SiO2, Al2O3, and CaO along with the Upper Continental Crust (UCC) in the Shiyang profile exhibited significant similarities with typical wind-formed profiles. This strongly suggests that the Shiyang profile has a wind-formed origin. (2) The mean value of the chemical index of alteration (CIA) of the Shiyang profile is 62.06, indicating that the Shiyang profile has been in the stage of primary chemical weathering. (3) The ratios of K2O/Al2O3, TiO2/Al2O3, and Fe2O3/Al2O3 in the Shiyang profile are comparable to those found in typical wind-formed profiles, suggesting a common source area and supporting the premise that the Shiyang profile is of wind-induced origin.(4) The regional climate has undergone a series of transitions: from a dry and cool phase in the early Holocene to warm and humid yet unstable conditions in the middle Holocene, and returning to dry and cool during the late Holocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Evolution of the Mangrove Wetland since the Holocene: Current Progress and Future Perspectives.
- Author
-
Yan, Xueyan, Ke, Xianzhong, Li, Qinghua, Gan, Yiqun, Xie, Xianjun, and Deng, Yamin
- Subjects
- *
TROPICAL ecosystems , *ENVIRONMENTAL geology , *MANGROVE forests , *CARBON sequestration , *STABLE isotopes , *MANGROVE plants - Abstract
Mangrove wetlands are among the four most productive tropical and subtropical ecosystems. They are also a core component of the coastal blue carbon ecosystem, which is of great ecological significance to human beings, plants, animals, and the global carbon balance. There has been a global decrease in the distribution of mangrove forests, and their ecological function has gradually degenerated since the Holocene. Sediment from coastal mangrove wetlands can provide records of climate change and human activities, and multiple proxies including palynology, leaf fossil, biomarkers, DNA, phytolith and stable isotopes, can be used to reconstruct the evolutionary stages of paleo-mangroves and to identify the effect of natural processes and human activities on the distribution and evolution of mangroves. This information can provide theoretical support for mangrove protection and for improving carbon sequestration capacity. This paper summarizes and compares the multiple proxies for mangrove reconstruction, reviews progress in the study of natural succession of global mangroves since the Holocene, expands on the influence mechanisms of human activities on mangrove growth and development and uses past information to lay a foundation for a model to predict future mangrove development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Comparison of the Australian summer monsoon-ENSO relationship between the early and late Holocene.
- Author
-
Jing, Yunqing
- Subjects
- *
PRECIPITATION anomalies , *OCEAN temperature , *CLIMATE extremes , *HOLOCENE Epoch ,EL Nino - Abstract
Due to the less fluctuating environment in the early Holocene (10–8 ka BP) than in the late Holocene (2 ka BP to present), the relationship between EI Nin ̃o-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and the Australian summer monsoon (AUSM) may be different from that in the late Holocene. But, the questions that how and why the relationship would change remain unknown. In this study, the transient climate simulations over the past 21,000 year (TraCE-21) are analyzed to address these questions. The model can reproduce the negative correlation relationship observed between the ENSO and AUSM. Compared with those in the early Holocene, the precipitation anomalies over the east of NA have shrunk by 5 degrees in the late Holocene. However, from the early to late Holocene, ENSO has significantly intensified by about 30%. Moreover, the maximum sea surface temperature anomalies (SSTAs) have shifted from the eastern to central tropical Pacific, thereby changing the ENSO teleconnection. The central tropical Pacific SSTAs in the late Holocene enhance the AUSM circulation, whereas the eastern tropical Pacific SSTAs in the early Holocene pose nonsignificant impacts on the AUSM. As such, the amplification and structural change of ENSO have altered the AUSM's spatial pattern and the AUSM-ENSO relationship in the Holocene. The results reveal how the AUSM may respond to ENSO in the past and shed light on understanding the future change of the ENSO-AUSM relationship and associated extreme climatic events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. First Quaternary fossil record of a blind snake (Scolecophidia, Serpentes) from South America (Argentina).
- Author
-
Peralta, Matias Javier and Ferrero, Brenda Soledad
- Subjects
- *
FOSSILS , *HERPETOFAUNA , *SNAKES , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *VERTEBRAE - Abstract
We report and describe the first fossil of a blind snake (Scolecophidia, Serpentes) for Argentina. The fossil is a complete and isolated vertebra assigned to Epictia sp. (Leptotyphlopidae). Modern members of Leptotyphlopidae are common in South America, especially in Argentina. The fossil was recovered from the basal layer of an Early Holocene fluvial unit in Entre Ríos province, northeastern Argentina. In addition to its important contribution to the fossil record of South America, this scolecophidian specimen also represents one of the few fossils documented from the Southern Hemisphere. Furthermore, this study represents the first contribution to the knowledge of scolecophidian trunk vertebral morphology in Argentinian species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Late Holocene submerged beachrocks in the Sea of Marmara (Tekirdağ-Altınova, NW Türkiye): Revealing the tectonic uplift rate through radiocarbon dating.
- Author
-
Tarı, Ufuk, Sunal, Gürsel, Welte, Caroline, Yaltırak, Cenk, Özcan, Orkan, and Wertnik, Melina
- Subjects
- *
DRONE aircraft , *LASER ablation , *BEACHROCK , *RADIOCARBON dating , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Beachrock formations represent a powerful paleo-environmental proxy in tectonically active coasts because they are ideal marker horizons for reconstructing past sea-level positions and revealing vertical uplift rates. In this study, beachrocks from the Tekirdağ-Altınova coastal area were used to model the evolution of the late Holocene coastline in the northern Sea of Marmara. As the Tekirdağ-Altınova coastal area is located in the tectonically active western Marmara region, this study aimed to investigate the role of tectonic processes in the late Holocene evolution of the coastal landscape in the study area by assessing long-term vertical deformation rates. To document and estimate coastal uplift, lesser known submerged beachrocks within the nearshore coastal area of the northern Sea of Marmara were analyzed with novel laser ablation (LA)–accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) and standard 14C-AMS techniques and correlated with late Holocene sea level variations. The preservation state of these beachrocks allowed for their identification and mapping through the use of an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) equipped with a high-resolution (5 cm) camera, followed by sampling via the coring method. The determined ages of marine shells and calcite cements from selected samples of submerged beachrock span between 2.6 and 13.6 ky BP. These ages could be correlated with the late Holocene sea-level highstand and were used to estimate the long-term uplift rate. Based on these findings, an uplift rate of approximately 0.56–0.79 mm/yr over the last 6500 years has been suggested for the area studied. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Evidence of lake-level fluctuations during the late Holocene based on diatoms from Lake Vransko, Cres Island (north-central Mediterranean).
- Author
-
Caput Mihalić, Katarina, Galović, Ines, Ilijanić, Nikolina, Hasan, Ozren, Ledinski, Maja, Miko, Slobodan, and Mesić, Saša
- Subjects
- *
NORTH Atlantic oscillation , *ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *DRINKING water , *CLIMATE change , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *FOSSIL diatoms , *SEDIMENT-water interfaces - Abstract
An investigation of Lake Vransko, located on the island of Cres in the Adriatic Sea, was performed in order to reconstruct the palaeoenvironmental changes that occurred during the late Holocene, based on diatoms. Fluctuations in the lake level were mostly driven by the intensification of climatic oscillations (wet periods during North Atlantic Oscillation intervals and summer drought during Azores High intervals) and anthropogenic influences (e.g. the extraction of drinking water). The anthropogenic impact of local deforestation is encountered, associated with a peak in phosphorous in the deeper parts of the lake cores. As a consequence of these impacts ten diatom abundance zones (DZs) and the water/sediment interface (WSI) were recorded from the deeper core (CS-51) and two from the shallower (CS-52) core, along with the WSI, based on which an abrupt fluctuation in the level of the lake was interpreted. A dominance of Epithemia adnata in the deeper core, and Gomphonema pumilum in the CS-51, and in the CS-52 indicated a shallow phase connected with the summer drought recorded in the lake. A dominance of Amphora inariensis , Pseudostaurosira spp., Cyclotella spp. and Pantocsekiella ocellata in the rest of the cores indicated deeper, more alkaline lake conditions during the wet periods. The DZs accord with depth variations in Adriatic coastal lakes that are key sites of more extreme recent changes in the local climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. 辽河平原东部黑土剖面抱粉组合及其时代和古气候意义.
- Author
-
鬲远, 周业泽, 秦天, 候红星, 裴阳, 寇福建, and 闫波
- Abstract
Copyright of Geology & Resources is the property of Geology & Resources Editorial Office and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Isotope‐Tracing for Conceptual Model Formation During the Holocene of Eletsky Palsa, Bolshezemelskaya Tundra.
- Author
-
Vasil'chuk, Yurij K., Budantseva, Nadine A., Vasil'chuk, Alla C., Chizhova, Julia N., Vasil'chuk, Jessica Yu., and Ginzburg, Alexander P.
- Subjects
STABLE isotopes ,WATER supply ,PERMAFROST ,CARBON isotopes ,CONCEPTUAL models - Abstract
Studies of permafrost agradation within peat mires leading to palsa growth and palsa dynamics during the Holocene are important for predicting the future of permafrost in a changing climate. The radiocarbon age of peat cover and stable isotope composition of the ice cores of palsas near Eletsky settlement, north‐east of the European part of Russia, were studied. Palsa growth was the most active between 8 and 5 cal ka BP. The main sources for ice core formation were precipitation‐fed surface and suprapermafrost waters. It is assumed that the isotope composition of the initial water was isotopically depleted compared with modern surface waters, which may be explained by general climate cooling during earlier stages of palsa growth (response to the 8.2 ka cooling event). The ice cores of the studied palsas were formed during the freezing of water in semi‐closed conditions, mainly by the segregation mechanism during permafrost agradation, thickness of the ice lenses and ice volume could depend on freezing rates and water supply. The upper part of the palsa ice core experienced deep thawing and could be saturated with meteoric water; repeated freezing of this part of the ice core likely occurred in closed system conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Paleomagnetic Secular Variations in North Greenland Around 81°N Over the Last 6,000 Years.
- Author
-
Girard, Juliette, Reilly, Brendan T., St‐Onge, Guillaume, Lagroix, France, Montero‐Serrano, Jean‐Carlos, Stoner, Joesph S., and Jennings, Anne E.
- Subjects
MAGNETIC pole ,MAGNETIC flux density ,GEOMAGNETIC variations ,EARTH'S core ,MARINE sediments - Abstract
We investigate full vector paleomagnetic changes recorded in high‐resolution sediments of Petermann Fjord, North Greenland, deposited over the last 6 kyr, in the context of the recent rapid changes in the geomagnetic field. A Paleomagnetic Secular Variation (PSV) stack (inclination, declination, and relative paleointensity) was reconstructed using four marine sediment cores with an independent age model constrained by seven radiocarbon ages. Magnetic investigations demonstrate that the paleomagnetic signal is carried by low coercivity ferrimagnetic minerals and is well reproduced in all cores, attesting to the quality and reliability of the paleomagnetic recording of these sediments. This signal is broadly consistent in directional changes with distant records in North America and the northern North Atlantic at centennial and millennial timescales, and has millennial scale intensity variations that are consistent with model predictions. The offset between a magnetization age determined through comparison with a northern North Atlantic PSV reference curve, GREENICE, and the radiocarbon age model indicates either a reasonable lock‐in depth of magnetization (∼11 cm from the coretop) or centennial‐scale reservoir age variation through time in the fjord. Reconstructed virtual geomagnetic pole (VGP) migration for the last 6 kyr shows that the recent migration of the magnetic North Pole is consistent with secular paleomagnetic variations on geologic timescales. Our results suggest that magnetic field intensity variations (temporal and spatial) are linked to magnetic flux lobe dynamics and influence the VGP migration. Plain Language Summary: The magnetic field of the Earth is generated by convection in the outer core of the Earth. Magnetic sediments deposited on the ocean seafloor record the Earth's magnetic field and are important archives of its past fluctuations (intensity and direction). Studying the geomagnetic field is important as it gives us information about processes in the Earth's core and can be used for correlating sediment cores together and for establishing the chronology of sedimentary sequences. In this study, we used sediment cores from Petermann Fjord (Nares Strait, Northern Greenland) to study past geomagnetic variations. Petermann Fjord is an excellent site to conduct such studies because of its close location to the North Magnetic Pole (NMP) and because of the high sediment accumulation rates that enable us to conduct studies with a high temporal resolution. We hypothesize that the NMP migration during the last millennia could have been driven by strong regional intensity features of the geomagnetic field and that the recent rapid migration of the NMP is not unusual because such amplitudes of migration happened in the past, without necessary leading to a reversal of the poles. Key Points: Paleomagnetic secular variations (inclination, declination and relative paleointensity) reconstituted in Petermann Fjord for the last 6 kyrGeomagnetic flux lobes could play a role in the virtual geomagnetic pole migrationThe recent migration of the North Magnetic Pole is consistent with Holocene paleomagnetic secular variations [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Fecal Stanols in the Bottom Sediments of Lake Zapovednoe (Evenkia) Indicate an Insignificant Anthropogenic Load in the Lake Basin in the Late Holocene.
- Author
-
Sinner, E. K., Boyandin, A. N., and Rogozin, D. Y.
- Subjects
LAKE sediments ,WATERSHEDS ,SITOSTEROLS ,GUT microbiome ,BODIES of water - Abstract
Biomarkers of the presence of animals and humans (fecal stanols) are well preserved in lake sediments. They are produced by intestinal microflora from sterols. Coprostanol and epicoprostanol are specific human stanols, since they are produced in the greatest quantities when compared to animals. These stanols are used to reconstruct the population history of water bodies. In this work, fecal stanols have been studied for the first time in the bottom sediments of Lake Zapovednoye, located in Evenkia (Siberia, Russia). The analysis is carried out using a gas chromatograph with a mass spectrometric detector. Along the entire core, there are no pronounced signals of coprostanol and epicoprostanol compared with other stanols, which indicates a negligible contribution of humans to the pool of fecal stanols. It is obvious that throughout the entire studied time interval (up to 2500 years ago) there were no permanent settlements in the lake's drainage basin, which is generally consistent with the extremely low population density of this region and unfavorable living conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. A Holocene fire history from Terra Nova National Park, Newfoundland, Canada: vegetation and climate change both influenced the fire regime.
- Author
-
Lake, Nickolas F., Arsenault, Andre, Cwynar, Les C., Willard, Debra, and Ali, Adam A.
- Subjects
LITTLE Ice Age ,WHITE pine ,PALYNOLOGY ,INTERVAL analysis ,TAIGAS - Abstract
Fire is the largest natural disturbance factor in the boreal forest and plays a critical role in the composition, structure, and succession of stands and landscapes. The island of Newfoundland, located in eastern Canada, is subjected to a greater maritime influence, which may result in longer fire return intervals. The limited data on the fire regime does not account for interactions between fire, vegetation, and climate throughout the Holocene. We used sediment cores from Arnold's Pond, Terra Nova National Park, which covered the last ~11,800 cal. yr BP, to investigate these interactions. We recognize 4 pollen zones and macroscopic charcoal analysis detected 45 local fire events. The 250-year mean fire return interval associated with the current vegetation is longer than a previous estimate for the park, but significantly shorter than other estimates for the island. Our mean fire return interval is within the range of fire estimates from Quebec with similar vegetation. Our results suggest that the fire regime was primarily influenced by vegetation and climate. The transition to an open forest from a shrub tundra resulted in increased fire activity and fire frequency, which were likely driven by additional fuel on the landscape, but could have also been influenced by unknown climatic factors. We identified several examples of changes in the fire frequencies and/or charcoal accumulation that coincided with regional climate shifts, but we also identified a non-synchronous change. The non-synchronous shift to drier conditions resulted in a ~500-year time lag between peak Pinus strobus abundance and maximum fire frequency. Synchronous shifts in fire activity and/or fire frequency coincided with the 8200 event, Medieval Climate Anomaly and Little Ice Age. We also noted a decrease in fire frequency between 2600-1500 cal. yr BP that coincided with similar changes in the fire frequency from ~3000-1000 cal. yr BP in Que bec. Our study highlights the complex interactions influencing the fire regime in our study area during the Holocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Brachiopods Hemithiris psittacea (Gmelin) (Order Rhynchonellida)—Indicators of Habitat Conditions in Recent and Quaternary Seas.
- Author
-
Pakhnevich, A. V.
- Abstract
Size and age characteristics of shell growth of the recent and Quaternary brachiopod Hemithiris psittacea (Gmelin, 1790) under different conditions are discussed. This species is proposed as an indicator of salinity in Quaternary seas. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Are human activities or climate changes the main causes of soil erosion in the South African drylands?: A palaeo‐perspective from three sites in the interior.
- Author
-
Lyons, Richard, Tooth, Stephen, Duller, Geoff A. T., and McCarthy, Terence
- Subjects
SOIL conservation ,OPTICALLY stimulated luminescence ,SOIL classification ,THERMOLUMINESCENCE dating ,CLIMATE change ,LITTLE Ice Age ,EROSION ,SOIL erosion - Abstract
Soil erosion across South Africa's drylands occurs widely in the form of gullies and badlands (locally termed dongas) that have developed in colluvium and in valley fills along incised rivers. This erosion has commonly been attributed to land mismanagement, particularly since European settlement, but natural factors such as soil properties, local base level fall and climate change have also been invoked. To disentangle human and natural factors, we use optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating, supported by documentary and archaeological evidence, to constrain the timing and causes of donga formation at three widely spaced sites across interior South Africa. At all three sites, the exposed stratigraphy indicates that hillslopes and floodplains underwent net sediment accumulation during most of the late Quaternary, and that present‐day deep erosion is of a magnitude unprecedented probably within at least the past 100 ka. OSL ages indicate that the onset of erosion at each site significantly pre‐dates European incursion and instead was broadly coincident with abrupt climatic changes that occurred during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA, ~ad 900–1300) and Little Ice Age (LIA, ~ ad 1300–1800). Based on correlation with palaeoclimate proxy records, we propose that erosion was triggered by abrupt hydroclimatic oscillations during the MCA, and continued during the LIA in response to climate‐driven, large floods. At these sites, soil type and local base level falls exert secondary controls on the specific locations, processes, rates and depths of erosion. In other areas of South Africa, clear links between land mismanagement and soil erosion have been demonstrated, but for sites where detailed investigations have yet to be undertaken, these findings challenge an often default assumption that soil erosion is necessarily attributable to human factors. Our findings have significant implications for soil erosion control strategies and assessment of South African dryland landscape response to future climate changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Millennial changes and cooling trends in land surface warm-season temperatures during the Holocene.
- Author
-
Zheng, Yukun, Liu, Hongyan, Wang, Hongya, Xie, Shucheng, Yang, Huan, Feng, Siwen, Zhang, Zeyu, Zhao, Wenjie, and Liang, Boyi
- Subjects
- *
LAND surface temperature , *MEMBRANE lipids , *SOLAR radiation , *ATMOSPHERIC models , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
The scarcity of proxies and calibration models for quantitatively reconstructing millennial timescale seasonal temperature tremendously constraints our understanding of the Holocene thermal variation and its driven mechanisms. Here, we established two global warm-season temperature models by applying deep learning neural network analysis to the branched tetraether membrane lipids originating from surface soil and lacustrine sediment bacteria. We utilized these optimal models in global well-dated lacustrine, peatland, and loess profiles covering the Holocene. All reconstructions of warm-season temperatures, consistent with climate model simulations, indicate cooling trends since the early Holocene, primarily induced by decreased solar radiation in the Northern Hemisphere due to the precession peak at the early. We further demonstrated that the membrane lipids can effectively enhance the future millennial seasonal temperature research, including winter temperatures, without being restricted by geographical location and sedimentary carrier. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Geochemical Indicators on the Central Tibetan Plateau Lake Sediments: Historical Climate Change and Regional Sustainability.
- Author
-
Ma, Xi, Wang, Xiaodan, Gao, Yunlong, Yue, Fujun, and Chen, Wei
- Abstract
This study investigates geochemical indicators (TOC, TN, C/N, δ
13 Corg, δ15 N, and pollen indicators) from sediment samples of Zigetang Co Lake on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) to explore past climate changes in the lake basin. The findings aim to provide essential data for developing sustainable strategies for the TP region. From 14.0 to 10.8 cal. ka BP, the δ15 N, TOC, TN, and δ13 Corg value of the lake sediments was relatively low; this indicated a low organic matter input into the lake, reflecting a probably cold and arid environment. In addition, the pollen was primarily composed of Artemisia and Gramineae, which are adapted to cold environments, further confirming that the climate during this period was likely cold and dry. From 10.8 to 8.2 cal. ka BP, the changes in the main plant composition were likely due to increased solar radiation, the onset of the monsoon, and higher temperatures and precipitation, which created more favorable conditions for the growth of Cyperaceae. From 8.2 to 4.2 cal. ka BP, when the solar radiation weakened and the monsoon diminished, the basin maintained relatively high water levels, with regional precipitation being likely influenced by westerly winds. From 4.2 to 0.01 cal. ka BP, δ13 Corg and δ15 N initially decreased and then increased, which was likely a transition from a cold–wet climate to warm–dry conditions during the late Holocene, and the Pollen sum also showed significant changes. Understanding climate evolution and vegetation changes is crucial for formulating timely policies to ensure regional sustainable development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The Middle and Late Holocene climate change in Bohai Bay revealed by diatom proxy.
- Author
-
Shang, Zhiwen, Li, Jianfen, Wang, Fu, and Wang, Hong
- Abstract
A total of 98 samples from two boreholes in shallow sea area and two oyster reefs in adjacent coastal plain in the northwestern coast of Bohai Bay were collected for diatom analyses and species identification. The ratio of the marine species Thalassionema nitzschioides to the intertidal-coastal species complex Cyclotella striata/stylorum serves as a novel proxy for assessing the strength of marine influence. Chronological data, corrected for the local residence time effect, facilitated the construction of a diatom proxy-based marine influence curve for the study area. This curve delineates the dynamics of marine influence and their correlations with paleo-climate fluctuations and the East Asian monsoon variability, as well as their role in chenier formation. Results include: (1) eight periods of intensified marine influence have been documented since 7 000 a BP in the study area. The peak of each period, as determined by the diatom proxy, corresponds closely to the warm climatic phases and stronger East Asian summer monsoons, suggesting that the peaks marine influence indicate typically the periods of climatic warmth and monsoon activity intensification in the region; (2) a strong correlation exists between the development of cheniers and marine influence, and chenier formation began with the increasing marine influence and terminated at the end of warm periods as marine influence weakens. The climatic changes in the coastal area, as indicated by the diatom proxy, hold significant potential for future related research endeavors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Late glacial to Holocene fluvial dynamics in the Upper Rhine alluvial plain, France.
- Author
-
Abdulkarim, Mubarak, Schmitt, Laurent, Fülling, Alexander, Rambeau, Claire, Ertlen, Damien, Mueller, Daniela, Chapkanski, Stoil, and Preusser, Frank
- Subjects
- *
ALLUVIAL plains , *RIVER channels , *YOUNGER Dryas , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *NEOTECTONICS , *FLUVIAL geomorphology - Abstract
High-resolution sedimentological and geochronological investigations of paleochannel systems in the Ried Central d'Alsace (northeastern France) allow for the reconstruction of the late glacial and Holocene fluvial evolution of this section of the Upper Rhine alluvial plain. During the Oldest Dryas, the landscape featured a dominant braided Rhine system and, to a lesser extent, a braided Fecht system. The shift to the Bølling-Allerød saw a narrowing of the Rhine's active channel belt, the development of a complex channel pattern, and the genesis of the Ill River. The river channel patterns remained unchanged during the Younger Dryas. In the Early Holocene, the Rhine's active belt narrowed further, and the Rhine and Ill Rivers developed braided-anastomosing and anastomosing channel patterns, respectively. Throughout the Holocene, both rivers maintained their channel patterns while migrating east and west across the alluvial plain, respectively. In the late glacial, fluvial dynamics in this section of the Upper Rhine plain were primarily influenced by climate-related environmental and hydrogeomorphological changes. Conversely, during the Holocene, the evolution of the fluvial hydrosystems was driven by a complex interaction of climatic and non-climatic factors, including human activity at the catchment scale, alluvial plain architecture, and local neotectonics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Revisiting the current phyto-scape of Boomplaas Cave (South Africa) and the possible implications of this for past day-range foraging.
- Author
-
Lombard, Marlize and Pargeter, Justin
- Subjects
- *
FORAGE , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL excavations - Abstract
Boomplaas Cave in the Western Cape Province of South Africa is one of only a few African sites with inland archaeological deposits spanning Marine Isotope Stages 4–1. Work conducted half a century ago predicted Boomplaas to be a meagre plant-food location. We reassess this interpretation here by presenting updated lists of the current vegetation and foodplants growing within roughly a day's foraging distance from the cave. By doing so, we increase the known foodplant species potentially available to Stone Age foragers by 356% and show that almost all the plant species/genera in the Boomplaas archaeobotanical assemblage still grow within a day's range of the site. We present nutritional values for some of the plant foods, highlighting those richest in moisture, ash, protein, fat, fibre, carbohydrates and energy and suggesting that such foods may have been important staples in the dietary ecology of the Stone Age foragers who used the site. Lastly, we demonstrate that the Boomplaas Cave foodplant fitness landscape is relatively rich and varied compared to similar data from other Cape sites such as Klasies River Main Cave, Diepkloof Rock Shelter and Hollow Rock Shelter. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The 4.2 ka event: A review of palaeoclimate literature and directions for future research.
- Author
-
Helama, Samuli
- Subjects
- *
NORTH Atlantic oscillation , *LITTLE Ice Age , *PALEOCLIMATOLOGY , *MIDDLE Ages , *CHRONOSTRATIGRAPHY - Abstract
In recent years, much evidence has been presented on the 4.2 ka event. A review of 317 palaeoclimate papers shows that dry conditions were common during the event, especially from Eastern Mediterranean to India. The 4.2 ka event was not, however, a global drought event. Wet conditions were reported especially for central/northern Europe and sub-Saharan Africa. The 4.2 ka event is typically characterized either as short (4.2–4.0 ka) or long (4.4–3.8 ka) episode, possibly developing over an extended interval of time, in keeping with the North Atlantic forcing and correlating with the Bond 3 event of ice-rafted debris. This forcing is understood to drive a southward migration of the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), resulting in decreased rainfall over most of the Asian monsoon region, with possibility that an interplay of El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) has modulated the global circulation. Cold conditions were also reported but less frequently, in comparison to other Bond events such as the 8.2 ka event, Dark Ages Cold Period and Little Ice Age. Some high-resolution records show a double peak structure of which two anomalies are tree-ring dated to 4.14–4.05 ka and 3.97 ka. Accurately and precisely dated high-resolution records indicative of various climatic variables, especially outside of the traditional study region (Mediterranean–Middle East–India–China), including reconstructions of the ENSO and NAO histories and ITCZ migrations, are crucially needed for rigorous examination of the global scale characteristics of the 4.2 ka event and its forcings. Such research seems to be just beginning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Half of the soil erosion in the Alps during the Holocene is explained by transient erosion crises as a consequence of rapid human land clearing.
- Author
-
Mazure, Théo, Saulnier, Georges-Marie, Giguet-Covex, Charline, Sabatier, Pierre, Bajard, Manon, Chanudet, Vincent, Arnaud, Fabien, and Jenny, Jean-Philippe
- Subjects
- *
SOIL erosion , *CUMULATIVE distribution function , *LAKE sediments , *BIOGEOCHEMICAL cycles , *LAND clearing , *LAND cover - Abstract
Human land use changes have altered soil erosion for millennia with extensive consequences on terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems as well as on biogeochemical cycles along the land-ocean continuum. Despite their great importance, past erosion trends have high uncertainties limiting quantitative estimates of long-term erosion dynamics. Here, we applied a new approach combining well-dated paleo-records of soil erosion from lake sediments and a spatially distributed semi-empirical model to simulate annual soil erosion in six lake watershed systems in the Northwestern Alps during the Holocene. Progressive and abrupt changes in soil erosion are detected in the six watersheds. Progressive erosion explains most of the soil exports observed during the Early to Mid-Holocene period (from 11,700 to 3000 cal. yr. BP), while transient erosion crises (i.e., periods of abrupt increase in the erosion rates spanning approximately 1000 ± 500 years) led to massive soil losses during the Late-Holocene period (from 3000 to 1000 cal. yr. BP). Our coupled approach of proxy-model reconstruction shows that the transient erosion crises represent the half of the total soil erosion exports during the Holocene. These estimates defy current representations of large-scale soil erosion during the Holocene that do not consider transient erosion crises, hence potentially underestimating the anthropogenic perturbation of lateral fluxes and fate along the land-ocean continuum. Our results further suggest that erosion and/or land cover proxies need to be consistently integrated into model approaches when attempting to estimate past variations in mass exports from terrestrial to aquatic ecosystems over centennial to millennial timescales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Tracing climate and human-driven erosional activity in the Transylvania lowlands (Central-Eastern Europe) during the Holocene.
- Author
-
Hutchinson, Simon M, Haliuc, Aritina, and Feurdean, Angelica
- Subjects
- *
ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature , *GLOBAL warming , *ATMOSPHERIC circulation , *STREAMFLOW , *RIVER sediments - Abstract
Erosion is a complex geomorphological process controlled by climate, soil and vegetation characteristics in addition to land-use. However, the interplay of these drivers is not fully understood. Here we present a 11.8 ka multi-proxy record of geochemical, mineral magnetic and grain size analyses from Lake Stiucii, in the Transylvania lowlands (CE Europe) documenting past erosional activity and the drivers of landscape change. We identify three major phases in the site's development. The first, a lacustrine phase (11.8–10.9 cal ka BP), is characterised by open water conditions with significant river inflow and depicts a period of greater erosion under a less developed catchment vegetation cover. Between 10.9 and 4.6 cal ka BP, the lake became a wetland characterised by shallow water with a reduced drainage network under warmer climate and/or reduced rainfall. From 4.6 cal ka BP, a second lacustrine phase developed driven by enhanced stream flow and sediment input subsequently accelerated by land use change. On a millennial scale, the two significant changes in the lake-catchment system and erosion regime at 10.9 and 4.6 cal ka BP may reflect a response to fluctuations in large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns. The eight short-term erosional events identified at 10.6, 7.8 cal ka BP, between 4.4–4.1, 3.5, 3.0–2.5, 1.9, 1.5, 1.1–0.8 cal ka BP, overlap well-known climate events. However, from 4.6 cal ka BP the climate-landscape relationship is amplified by rising anthropogenic impacts. Our data provide critical information on the paleoenvironmental evolution of CE Europe's lowlands and facilitate discussion of the effects of millennial and centennial climatic shifts as expressed in the local environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Middle to Late Holocene lake level variations recorded by shoreline tufa of Longmu Co Lake, northwestern Tibet Plateau.
- Author
-
Lin, Xu, Lan, Jianghu, Sun, Youbin, Sinha, Ashish, Cheng, Xing, Lin, Fangyuan, Zhang, Jin, Li, Yanzhen, Cheng, Peng, Chang, Hong, Hussain, Syed Asim, Wang, Le, and Tan, Liangcheng
- Subjects
- *
WATER levels , *TUFAS , *INVERSE relationships (Mathematics) , *MELTWATER , *HOLOCENE Epoch - Abstract
Tufa deposits have significant potential for reconstructing past lake-level fluctuations. Here, we conducted U-Th dating of tufa deposits exposed along the shoreline of Longmu Co Lake in the northwestern Tibetan Plateau to reconstruct its water level history during the middle-late Holocene. Our data demonstrate that Longmu Co Lake reached its highest level (61 m above the present level) at around 7.4 ka in response to the strengthened Indian Summer Monsoon and increased glacial meltwater; its lake level subsequently decreased due to solar insolation-induced decline in summer monsoon and glacial meltwater. Moreover, we find that the lake level experienced an abrupt decline at ~2.2 ka with a maximum amplitude of 13 m, probably owing to the rapid cooling of the local climate. The δ18O and δ13C of Longmu Co tufa also show a covariance trend, which supports the regional climate change reflected by the lake level fluctuation of Longmu Co. Additionally, we observed an inverse correlation between initial δ234U content in tufa and lake level variation, suggesting that initial calcium δ234U can serve as a proxy for reconstructing environmental changes. Our study therefore implies that lake tufa as a reliable archive for accurately reconstructing lake level changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Elevation of basal lacustrine sediments along the mid-lower reaches of the Yangtze River and its implications for the reconstruction of Holocene water levels.
- Author
-
Yao, Shuchun, Li, Chunhai, and Xue, Bin
- Subjects
- *
WATER levels , *HOLOCENE Epoch , *RIVER channels , *ALTITUDES , *WATER depth , *LAKES , *STREAM-gauging stations , *TIDAL basins - Abstract
The middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, a primary region for freshwater lakes in China, have undergone significant transformations throughout the Holocene. These changes, driven by factors such as sea-level rise, climate change, and human activities, have led to the progressive elevation of water levels in this area. As a result, a floodplain has emerged, characterized by the formation of numerous shallow lakes along the river course. However, the pattern of water-level changes in the main channel of the Yangtze River during the Holocene remains unclear. This gap in knowledge poses challenges for understanding sediment transport dynamics, the interactions between the river and its adjacent lakes, and the prevention and control of flood disasters in the Yangtze River basin. To shed light on these issues, our study compiled data on the surface elevation and water depth of 81 lakes in the mid-lower reaches of the Yangtze River basin. Additionally, we analyzed historical water-level records from the 1900s to the 1970s at eight gauging stations from Shashi to Jiangyin along the river's main stream. Our findings reveal that, particularly along the Jingjiang section, the basal elevation of most lakes is lower than the Yangtze River's water level during the dry season. Conversely, the water level of the main stream exceeds that of both the floodplain and the lakes enclosed by the Jingjiang embankment. In the tidal reach, especially within the Taihu Lake basin, the basal elevation of lakes typically falls below sea level. Meanwhile, lakes located along the section from Chenglingji to Wuhu exhibit basal elevations that correspond with the Yangtze River's annual average and dry season water levels. Given the widespread presence of lakes along the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, our study introduces a new proxy for reconstructing the mean water level of the mid-lower Yangtze River in the Holocene. By analyzing sediments from Nanyi Lake and Chenyao Lake in the lower Yangtze River, we attempted to reconstruct the water level of the Yangtze River's main channel since 8 ka BP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. FOGO NA TOCA: USO DO FOGO E ANTRACOLOGIA NA TOCA DO SÍTIO DO MEIO (PIAUÍ, BRASIL).
- Author
-
Mota, Leidiana and Scheel-Ybert, Rita
- Subjects
FOREST plants ,COMBUSTION ,MATERIAL culture ,CHARCOAL ,FUELWOOD - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de Arqueologia is the property of Revista de Arqueologia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. New Diatom and Sedimentary Data Confirm the Existence of the Northern Paleo-Outlet from Lake Ladoga to the Baltic Sea.
- Author
-
Ludikova, Anna V., Subetto, Dmitry A., Kuznetsov, Denis D., Orlov, Alexander V., and Shatalova, Angelina E.
- Subjects
WATERSHEDS ,NAVICULA ,HOLOCENE Epoch ,LAKES ,STRAITS ,DIATOMS - Abstract
Despite more than 100 years of research, a number of questions concerning the evolution of the post-glacial connection between Lake Ladoga, the largest European lake, and the Baltic Sea remain unanswered. In particular, the location and chronological frames of the paleo-outlet from Lake Ladoga in the Holocene remain debatable. Paleolimnological studies were performed in small lakes in the northern part of the Karelian Isthmus (NW Russia), where the outlet from Lake Ladoga, the Heinjoki Strait, is thought to have existed until the lake drained to the south due to the tilting of its basin. The presence of the indicative "Ladoga species" (e.g., Aulacoseira islandica, Achnanthes joursacense, Cymbella sinuata, Ellerbeckia arenaria, Navicula aboensis, N. jaernefeltii, N. jentzschii, etc.) in the diatom assemblages is used as evidence for the influence of Lake Ladoga during the accumulation of coarse-grained sediments at the bottom of the ancient channel. It also confirms the functioning of the hypothetical northern local branch of the strait. Decreased abundances of the "Ladoga species" and the onset of the accumulation of fine-grained sediments suggest that the water discharge via this paleo-outlet rapidly reduced starting from ca. 4100 cal BP. The termination of the functioning of the Heinjoki Strait is recorded as an abrupt disappearance of the indicative taxa from the diatom record. This was dated to ca. 3500–3200 cal BP, which corresponds to the estimated ages of the birth of the River Neva, the present outlet from Lake Ladoga. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The Oldest Holocene Caribbean Mangroves and Postglacial Sea Level Rise: Biogeographical Implications.
- Author
-
Rull, Valentí
- Subjects
SEA level ,CONTINENTAL shelf ,HOLOCENE Epoch ,MANGROVE plants ,GLACIATION - Abstract
This commentary underscores the importance of the recent discovery of the oldest in situ Holocene mangrove sediments found to date in the Caribbean region. It also emphasizes the implications of this finding for understanding postglacial sea level rise and the subsequent recolonization of current Caribbean coasts by mangrove communities. These communities likely survived the last glaciation in small microrefugia located beyond the present continental shelf, from where they expanded to form the present-day mangrove biogeographical patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.